8 MOUNTAIN FIRE, IN NIGHT BLAZE, ATTRACTS MANY Fanned by Fresh Breeze First Mountain Makes Spec tacular Sight Fanned by the freshening winds of late yesterday and last night, the forest fire that started in the sec tion of the Blue Mountain near Bella Vista on Sunday, broke out anew last night, but to-day is again re ported as being well under control, it is burning in several sections, but a corps of fire fighters are at work and expect to extinguish the flames to-day. The flames could be seen 3 W\m.Strouse HATS Make Good— ss and $6.50 (( Harrisburg's Dependable Store" mm W M - STROUSE & CO. W • as ac Qui r ed the reputation fsHEi ?f the store for the real boys of y i Harrisburg. Sturdy clothing only, is found mtJm on i i OU u rac^s a ?d time after time we are ■ \ WffnMfa- • P r ices we ask are the lowest vf/1/Mm.t 1] ? town—The Mothers of the boys also are always well pleased with the utmost courtesy I t/i and consideration shown them and the cordial reception they receive, even though they are r $ : WfrKJ, y looking. In addition we have a big [i fyjfamKm surprise waiting for eveiy boy who buys his /i;fn spring suit here—the boys who have gotten ffmrßfjKk 1 are and anxious to tell their yMmmm | friends, about both the fine well made suits i' Mir jjifiAl anc * the big surprise. One of the best things ffl'4/noi about Wm. Strouse merchandise are the ! Am' '''l&rw extremely low prices. Mothers you will be ! Jar ')'%!&. l astonished to find the qualities you can get at Easter Specials for Boys ffl Blouses Hosiery Wash Suits Shirts Caps Jerseys I f Neckwear Hats Underwear J \lf™7 u Wm. Strouse & Co. 310 Market St. > Harrisburg, Pa. TUESDAY EVENING, EX-GERMAN PRINCE HAS BROKEN BONES By Associated Press. Amsterdam, April B.—Former German Crown Prince Frederick William is suffering from a brok en hand and wrist as a result of a motorcycle accident. He was riding in company with an offi cial of the Dutch Ministry of Communications and turned a corner too sharply, the machine crashing into a gate, according to a Wieringen dispatch to the Han delsblad. plainly from the city last evening, and attracted the attention of hun dreds of persons. It is believed that slightly more than four hundred acres of land has been burned over, but all of this has been swept by flames many times. On the south side of the mountain land of H. S. Miller and of the George Alleman estate has been burned while on the north side the flames are on land of Albert Seldel, of Marysville. The Are is burning to day only on the Alleman and Seidel lands. The acreage burned over in cludes 150 owned by Miller: 130 of the Alleman estate and slightly more than 100 owned by Seidel. The tire first broke out on Sun day afternoon and burned quite fiercely during the night, creating considerable interest in this city from which the flames were quite visible. The flames had been gotten fairly under control yesterday, but got away from the lire fighters when the wind freshened yesterday. Care less arbutus hunters are blamed for the original flame. There is no forest fire burning in the neighborhood of Duncannon, as has been erroneously reported. The forest fire that has been seen from this city is near Bella Vista, in Cumberland county, approximate ly ten miles from Duncannon. Three mountains intervene between the burning land and the Perry county town. BARNUM'S MENAGERIE TAME IN COMPARISON [Continued front First Page.] this morning, and if gods continue to come in the balance of to-day and all of tomorrow as on Monday and this morning, and if goods continue record breaker. Actual sale begins Thursday morning. Among the curiosities to be found at the Rummage Sale are the fol lowing One statue of Hiawatha or Alfa retta or Kiwanis, or some other In dian. This statue is one given to the late Senator Simon Cameron by admirers many years ago. Photographs of William Howard Taft and General Hartranft. The glass on the picture of Mr. Taft is cracked. One photograph of the Governors of Pennsylvania between 1800 and 1882. From the number of photo graphs included in this collection they had Governors every little while in those days. One plug hat in very good condi tion, and worn in only three inaug ural parades. A visitor this morn ing offered five dollars for the hat. One statuette of "Pink Lady." One sugar bowl with sugar in it. Three cuckoo clocks, all of which "cuckoo." These are only a few of the hun dreds of odd articles to be found at the sale. Frank Payne, the well known shoe manufacturer, this morning sent three crates of shoes to sale head quarters. These shoes are as good as can be bought anywhere. There are hundreds of pairs of other shoes, and bale after bale of clothing of all sorts. Including serviceable suits which can be worn as work clothes. Between eight o'clock this morn ing and ten, one hundred and eight een persons called the headquarters and asked that trucks be sent to their homes for articles to be do nated to the sale. The sale is for the benefit of the Harrisburg Hospital. Every cent re ceived from the sale of goods goes to the Hospital. Expenses of putting on the sale, if there are any, will be made by charitably inclined men and women of this city. SENATE HOLDS MEMORIAL The Senate held a brief memorial service this afternoon In memory of the late Senator Smith, of Philadel phia, who died last winter. There were speeches by several Senators from the City of Brotherly Liove. MINK CAVE HEARING HELD The Senate committee on Mines and Mining will hold a hearing at 2 o'clock this afternoon in the Senate caucus room, on the Cave" bill. Many prominent operators and labor leaders from all over the State are expected to attend. BASfUSBURG TELEGBXPB WAR'S VETERANS TO LABOR FOR VICTORY LOAN Soldiers Who Served Nation at Front to Help Coun try at Home WHAT'S IT WORTH TO YOU? What's it worth to you to have the great majority of Harris burg soldiers home again safe and sound—home right now or coming home soon? What's it worth to you to have them back alive and hearty? The citizens of Harrisburg, during the Victory Loan com paign which begins April 28 will have an opportunity to answer this question to the boys them selves. Chairman Andrew S. Patter son, of the Harrisburg Victory Loan committee, proposes to en list the services of hundreds of returned soldiers in the cam paign for the sale of the fifth and last Liberty Bonds. With the announcement yesterday of the chairmen who will direct the Victory Loan, campaign in what is known as the- Harrisburg district, preliminaries for the fifth and last Liberty Loan campaign are under way. Donald McCormick, who is chairman of the district compris ing Dauphin, Perry and Juniata counties, has announced the ap pointment of the following chair men: For Dauphin county, William Jennings, of Harrisburg; Juniata county, John J. Patterson, of Mif flimtown; Perry county, W. W. Rice, of New Bloomfield; Harrisburg city, Andrew S. Patterson. Chairman Patterson haa an nounced that M. H. Dean, of the EMiott-Fisher Company, will be chairman of the industrial campaign in this city, and Frank C. Sites will be in charge of the homes cam paign. These compaigns will be put on simultaneously during the week beginning April 28. The quota for this district has not yet been announced, according to Donald McCormick, but this an nouncement is expected within a few days. The terms of the loan will allow for payments from May to Novem ber, a period of six months. A meeting of division chairmen in charge of the loan campaign in this city will be held late to-day, when plans will be discussed for or ganization. The chairmen, immedi ately after the meeting, will get in touch with their various team cap tains, who in turn will notify their u c rlters. ' In addition to the great number of men who took part in the last campaign. Chairman Patterson plans to enlist several hundreds of soldiers returned from France and the training camps as salesmen. These soldiers will have some per plexing questions to put to persons who cannot see their way clear to purchase Victory Bonds. SOVIET ARMY IS LOOKED TO FOR AID [Continued from First Page.] Germany, and the resumption of a "brotherly connection" with the Russian and Hungarian peoples is announced in the proclamation of the new Soviet gov ernment for Bavaria, formed here. "Long live the world revolution!" the proclamation concludes. The text of the document reads: "The decision arrived at for Ba varia is the formation of a council of the republic of revolutionary workers and peasants of* Bavaria, including all our brothers, now united, separated by no party laws. From now on no exploitation or op pression will be tolerated. The dic tatorship of the proletariat has now become a fact. The legalization of a genuine socialistic community now is achieved, in which every working man may participate in public life and in a just socialistic age. "The lantag has been dissolved and the old ministry retired. Peo ples commissaries, responsible to the people and chosen by a council of the working people, will receive extraordinary powers to be employ ed in certain labor fields. Their as sistants will be intelligent men from all parts of the revolutionary and socialistic community. Countless valuable forces of officialdom, espe cially from the lower middle official class, will be asked to co-operate in the new work. The bureaucratic system will be absolutely eliminated and the press will be socialized. "As a protection for the Bavarian council of the republic against revo lutionary attacks from without and within, a Red army will be created immediately and revolutionary court will pursue ruthlessly every attempt upon the ouncil. "The government of the Bavarian council republic follows the exam ple of the Hungarian and Russian peoples. It will resume immediately a brotherly connection with these peoples but it declines any connec tion with the contemptuous Ebert- Scheidemann government because that government is continuing under the flag of a socialistic republic the imperialistic, capitalistic and mili tary business of the disgraceful, broken down German empire. It calls upon all German brothers to take the same view. It greets all proletarians wherever revolutionary socialism is fighting—in Wurttcm berg, in the Ruhr district, in the whole world. Establishes Wide Holiday "As a sign of joyous hope for a fortunate future for all humanity it establishes April 7 as a holiday for all humanity, as a sign of the be ginning of the departure, the flight of the age of capitalism, all work is stopped. Bavaria ceases, on April 7, insofar as it is not necessary for the welfare of the working people, to do labor. "Long live free Bavaria! Long live the council government! Long live the world revolution!" Spartacan Loaders in Control Copenhagen, April B.—A political movement of great importance is imminent in the region of Ham burg, reports from Berlin say. Doc tors Herz and Hauffenberg, Spar tacan leaders, it is added, have al most succeeded in making them-- selves masters of the situation and in converting Hamburg and the re gion between Hamburg and Bre men into a Soviet republic. Protests against the formation of the Soviet government, voiced at a political meeting in Bamberg, north ern Bavaria, are reported in dis patches from that city. Deputies of all the Bourgeolse parties of the three Franconian governments upper, lower and middle Franconja, met In Bamberg and registered an unanl- Will Soon Return Home With Rainbow Division Brig-Gen*raj .MAcAr-t"hu. 1 Brlgadlcr-Generaf Douglas" Mac A rt thur, commander of the Forty-second | (Rainbow Division), who will return j home with the famous American fighters early next month. The division is at present with the Army of Occupation in Germany. Brigadier-General MaeAr tliur is one of the outstanding military figures of the great war. He went to France as a major and was promoted to his present rank through his gallant work on the field. He has won both the French Was Cross and the American Distinguished Service Medal for valor In action. He is a regular army man and a son of the late Major-General Arthur Mac Arthur. mous protest against the proclama tion of the new regime at Munich. "The whole population of north ern Bavaria," reads the protest, "is warned against allowing itself to be intimidated through fear of a van ishing minority, mainly consisting of persons predominantly of a foreign face. "Bavaria is on the edge of a precipice, and if it is not preserved from a downfall everything is lost. Bavaria will then become the prey of fratricide, plundering and famine. A further consequence will be the complete collapse of economic life. Foreign countries will refuse food and assistance to a Bolshevik Ba varia and help from Russia and Hungary is out of the question, as they are tortured by famine. "Those who tell you this are your countrymen, and not foreigners who a few months ago knew nothing of Bavaria and who are indifferent to your fate." A Berlin dispatch says that Erich Muehsam, a prominent communist, IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM jMllllllllllllilM lUn M F Tflis ,s Craft 1 I I BBi I Week From one End of 1 I ||||| The Country to the Other J a wee k devoted to making 1 the homes of America all the more beautiful—all the more attractive places to live in. HI No store anywhere can show a more entrancing array of H §" jk TTT bright, fresh, crisp, new draperies or drapery fabrics than those k A r I now displayed at GOLDSMITH'S. 'j| ' All that is new and decidedly exclusive —and of the usual GOLDSMITH QUALITY —finds a full representation in om it Mm stocks. _ M ' Slirli Come in this week—let us assist you with your planning— ( || suggestions cheerfully made when we understand the effect for r which you are striving to attain in your home decorations. | Curtain and Drapery Materials Specially Priced = D D | = -r jk ~r V y V 7 "W" f Celebrated Quaker Craft large assortments, 50 Inches *7ll _ and up =3 \/% / I. B. \J£_ Laces, for every use at and up wide, per yard #Jt- YT f " V per yard t- Marquisettes, Voiles and , S n n Imported Curtain Madras, Dainty Grenadine at an( * up *§3 in daint y colors at per and up yard .. Sel SSDSK yard " Plain and Figured Denim g Sunfast Materials large for Curtains and Upholstery QC— and up -=£3 gX B_j 11} jIK stocks, every color, P° l '7®?** an( ' "P uses, per yard Out 1 liKBfP Pfll ||fl Hfl yard ' Colored Marquisette f O| A!Q/, and up ' ==== "'* H Whittall's 9x12 Royal dkQQ. WhittalTs 9xxl2 Peerless H H Worcester Rugs SOO Body Brussels vOt 1 ( gj Not one or two Rugs at greatly reduced prices—but a great big stock at the same proportinate reductions. : M Now Is the Time to Place Your Orders for Awnings to Be Certain You Can Get Them When You j S, Want Them. Best of Workmanship Always. Awning Stripes 65c Per Yard ' Rug arid Drapery Dept.—Second Floor |l Central Penna.'s Best Furniture Store NORTH MARKET SQUARE CHILDREN ARE READY FOR BIG GARDEN PARADE Hundreds of Youngsters From Hill Schools Join in the Demonstration Hundreds of school children of the city will march to-night in the school garden parade, which will start at 5 o'clock at Thirteenth and Derry streets. The Municipal Band will play and Mayor Daniel L. Keis tcr will deliver an address. Follow ing the parade, motion pictures will be shown of school garden work in other cities. The parade will move at 5 o'clock at Thirteenth and Derry streets. It will move in Thirteenth street to Market, to Sixteenth, to State, to Seventeenth, to Derry and back to Thirteenth, where Mayor Keister .will address the marchers. Children from nine schools of the I city will participate in the parade. | Tractors will be in line to illus i trate modern methods of farming. Shirley B. Watts will be in charge |of one of these machines and the other is owned by Walter S. Schell. The order of the schools and the vegetables they will represent it) the big parade are: ' Allison Hill, radish; Forney, lettuce; Foose, beans; Lin coln, beets; Melrose, onion"; Shim mell, turnip; Webster, cabbage; Woodward, pumpkin; Vernon, corn. Sixty boys from each school, car rying rakes and hoes, will act as guards of honor and will be cap tained by war veterans. Boy Scouts will also be in line. Formation of the schools in the parade is announced as follows: Foose, Shimmell and Webster, Thir teenth, south of Derry; Melrose, Forney and Vernon, Derry, east of Thirteenth; Allison, near fountain; Lincoln and Woodward, Evergreen and Derry, west of fountain. who is included in the Bavarian So viet government, has been given un limited powers by the Bavarian central council, according to the Aehtuhrblatt, and thus exercises an unrestricted dictatorship. Muehsam and Landauer (the mirlister of "popular enlighten ment"), are to-day the rulers who dominate Munich, with the support of the garrison, this newspaper de clares. It expresses the opinion that the Soviet government, however, will not last, as the - people are opposed to the dictatorship and hope that the count# - measures taken by Pre mier Hoffman, of the old govern ment, will be effective. ' " APRIL 8, 1919 WOULD CHECK SALE OF HABIT FORMING DRUGS Bill Introduced in Senate Last Night by Allegheny Senator One of the most draslic regulatory measures yet introduced to stop the sale of dangerous drugs was intro duced in the Senate last night by Senator Leslie, Allegheny. The bill would prohibit the sale of all habit-producing drugs, with nit a physician's prescription. The pres ent acc forbids the sale of opium and cocaine and their derivities. A prominent official in the Bureau of Drug Control, made the following statement concerning the measure this morning. "For a iondr time the Bureau of Drug Control has been hampered in its offoits to regulate the drug evil, because the present bill exempts all habit-forming drugs, except opium and cocaine, from restriction as to unlimited pure hose. 1 "One of the most deadly of habit f irming narcotics is chloralhydrate, against whose sale, no law exists. The new lull, by prohibiting the sale of ail' habit-forming drugs, without A New Coal We are featuring a NEW COAL that is unquestionably The Best Coal On the Market This claim is borne out by the statements of those who have used it. Why not use the best? It costs no more. Before placing your order for coal it will be well worth your while to give our NEW COAL a trial. We are in a position to give prompt and efficient deliveries. Order Now Before Prices Advance McCreath Bros. 567 Race Street Both Phones a pl.v? Ir.ifin's j reecription. w> uld o: fectu&ily remedy this evil. "The measure is not intended 1 curtail business of legitimate pha mai'fts because they realizo tl evil in the unrestricted sale of the; drugs, just as much has we do. Tl bureau lias been impressed with tl splendid cc-o'eration which tl druggists of the Plate have given i the past, fnd t tiieve Hhat they wi prove just, as patriotic should tt pror used bill become a law." Asked, cncerning regulation < headache tablets, "pain relievers etc., the official denied that the sale was prohibited, saying that tl manufacturers would merely 1 compelled to paste precautionai labels on the bottles, warnin against an overdose. $ For Stubborn Corns v w tp Many people are discouraged because they have tried in vain to get rid of a "stub born," deep-rooted com. which is making their life miserable. But they should take hope for the worst corn in the world can be cured. Here is an easy but scientific treatment which your own druggist will tel you actually docs the work. Simply give the feet a good Cal-o-cide foot-bath in hoi water, then apply one of the little bul powerful plasters supplied with each pack' ago of Cal-o-cide. It may take a second treatment, but rest assured the corn wil! ! positively come out, root and all. This treatment also overcomes burning aching ! and sweating. A package of Cal-o-cidc costs only a quarter but is surely vrortt dollars to most people.—Adv.